Day 41

Day 41

This staircase connects the elevated 241st Street viaduct with an NYPD narcotics unit parking lot, and is the only connection between the police facility and the rest of the Bronx. Since the gate at the top is permanently locked, I had to walk through Mount Vernon (a city in Westchester County) to get here. And, of course, even if the gate were open, you would still have to drive through Mount Vernon to get here by car, making this little piece of the Bronx something close to an exclave. This strange geography is reminiscent of the Northwest Angle.

Day 41

Day 41

Day 41

Located on Baldwin Street in the Bronx, just north of the NYPD narcotics unit. The cars parked on the upper roadway (MacQuesten Parkway — which provides the only vehicular access to Baldwin Street), as well as all the buildings you see, are in Westchester County.

Day 41

This Mount Vernon roadway transitions into a pedestrian path as it enters the Bronx neighborhood of Wakefield. Mount Vernon is named for the Virginia plantation where George Washington lived most of his life; Wakefield is named for the Virginia plantation where he was born.

Day 41

Day 41

Outside the gate there is a growing memorial to the unarmed young man shot and killed by an NYPD officer last week. More than a hundred novena candles, many of them burning, line the sidewalk. On the fence hang numerous signs expressing grief and sadness, but the dominant emotion is anger at a police department that is perceived as racist and uncaring. I was standing there in rapt silence with five or six other people when a TV news crew came over, looking to stick their giant camera in the face of those mourning. Everyone immediately dispersed without a word, a collective show of disgust at that disrespectful treatment. The two figures in this photo are the reporter and cameraman.

Day 41

Day 41

Day 41

I'm walking every street in New York City.

This is the counterpoint to my walk across the US. Instead of seeing a million places for just a minute each, I'm going to spend a million minutes exploring just one place. By the time I finish walking every block of every street in all five boroughs, I'll have traveled more than 8,000 miles on foot — all within a single city. Details!

Your donations allow me to keep walking full-time. If you think what I'm doing is valuable and you'd like to offer some support, I would be very grateful. On the other hand, if you think I'm a worthless bum, feel free to email me and tell me to get a job, bozo. Both are excellent options!